seamus wrote: » Nothing gets people more annoyed than if they're a little less well-off than they were last year.
Yitzhak Rabin wrote: » Your usual hodge-podge of lefties and lunatics. A few there will be protesting against war and famine etc.,
Yitzhak Rabin wrote: » Your usual hodge-podge of lefties and lunatics. A few there will be protesting against war and famine etc., others who don't want to pay taxes for services they use, assorted treehuggers, and a few banging on about 'freeing da weed', but for most though its just a good excuse to throw on the hemp poncho, light up a doob, chant a few slogans and blow whistles with their mates and go home with a smug satisfaction that they "at least did something", whatever that means...
Snake Pliisken wrote: » The apathy and ignorance in this thread is discouraging. A generation of this country will grow up worse off because of the actions of our political and banking class and when those they bent over for come to our shores we bemoan anyone who would stand up and be counted? Pathetic.
FTA69 wrote: » The world is a sickeningly unequal place riven by war and famine.
MagicMarker wrote: » Has it ever not been....?
Cody Pomeray wrote: » Yeah, what a bunch of losers.
FTA69 wrote: » Even if a few of them are a shower of hippies the basic premise of protesting at the G8 is justified. The world is a sickeningly unequal place riven by war and famine. In the western world in general working people are under systematic attack in terms of wages, jobs and living standards while the share of the world's wealth gets increasingly concentrated in the hands of an elite. If you want to b*tch about something then I suggest the above is of more importance than whether a protester is a vegetarian or not.
68Murph68 wrote: » Given it's generally only the richest in society who take advantage of tax havens, this can only be a good thing for the average punter. .
68Murph68 wrote: » And is the G8 working to make the world a better place or a worse place? Syria is one of the key topics. Are the world leaders going to be trying to do what they can to sort the situation out or are they going to be talking about how to keep the civil war going longer? Another issue on the table is tax. Basically the big countries are looking to crack down on tax havens. Given it's generally only the richest in society who take advantage of tax havens, this can only be a good thing for the average punter. Will the G8 make the situation for the average person better or worse in relation to tax? Obviously the lads in the G8 aren't all the nicest bunch in the world but the nonsense the protesters come out with is just protesting for the sake of protesting. Politics is the art of the possible. The politicians are doing what little they possibly can to improve things. They don't have a magic wand to wave and solve all of the world's problems. The protesters are complaining because the world isn't perfect. If the G8 announced tomorrow that they had solved world hunger 99% of the folk protesting would still be giving out.
And is the G8 working to make the world a better place or a worse place?
Syria is one of the key topics. Are the world leaders going to be trying to do what they can to sort the situation out or are they going to be talking about how to keep the civil war going longer?